Objectives: To investigate the effects of a care intervention on the knowledge of, attitudes toward, intention to provide, and initiation of hospice care among caregivers of terminally ill patients with the eight major non-cancer diseases.

Methods: A two-group pre-post-test randomized intervention design was adopted. The intervention group received the SHARE model intervention. The SHARE intervention was implemented once a week for 6 weeks, with each session lasting 20-60 min.

Results: The intervention and control groups differed significantly in mean post-test scores for knowledge of hospice care ( = -4.973, = .00) and intentions to provide hospice care ( = -2.424, = .02). In the intervention group, pre- and post-test scores differed significantly for knowledge of hospice care ( = -6.201, = .000), attitudes toward hospice care ( = -2.848, = .008), and intentions to provide hospice care ( = -2.781, = .009).

Conclusions: The SHARE intervention improved knowledge of hospice care, intentions to provide, and initiation of hospice care among the caregivers of terminally ill patients with non-cancer diseases.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/00302228231214305DOI Listing

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